| Literature DB >> 21246392 |
F Randelli1, F Biggi, G Della Rocca, P Grossi, D Imberti, R Landolfi, G Palareti, D Prisco.
Abstract
Anticoagulant prophylaxis for preventing venous thromboembolism (VTE) is a worldwide established procedure in hip and knee replacement surgery, as well as in the treatment of femoral neck fractures (FNF). Different guidelines are available in the literature, with quite different recommendations. None of them is a multidisciplinary effort as the one presented. The Italian Society for Studies on Haemostasis and Thrombosis (SISET), the Italian Society of Orthopaedics and Traumatology (SIOT), the association of Orthopaedists and Traumatologists of Italian Hospitals (OTODI), together with the Italian Society of Anesthesia, Analgesia, Resuscitation, and Intensive Care (SIAARTI) have set down easy and quick suggestions for VTE prophylaxis in hip and knee surgery as well as in FNF treatment. This inter-society consensus statement aims at simplifying the grading system reported in the literature, and its goal is to benefit its clinical application. Special focus is given to fragile patients, those with high bleeding risk, and those receiving chronic antiplatelet (APT) and vitamin K antagonists treatment. A special chapter is dedicated to regional anaesthesia and VTE prophylaxis.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21246392 PMCID: PMC3052424 DOI: 10.1007/s10195-010-0125-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Traumatol ISSN: 1590-9921
Patients at high risk of bleeding and patients who need careful evaluation for possible risk of bleeding
| Patients at high risk of bleeding | Patients to be carefully evaluated for possible risk of bleeding |
|---|---|
| Prolonged PT (INR > 1.5) | Prolonged APTT (except antiphospholipid antibody syndrome) |
| Thrombocytopenia < 50,000/µl | |
| Known bleeding diathesis | Severe CRF (creatinine clearance < 30 ml/min) |
| Chronic liver disease with prior bleeding episodes | Family or personal history of major bleeding |
| Multiple trauma (ISS ≥ 15) | Concomitant use of drugs affecting hemostasis (e.g., antiplatelet drugs, anti-inflammatory drugs) |
PT prothrombin time,INR International normalized ratio,ISS injury severity score,APTT antiplatelet treatment,CRF chronic renal failure
Dosage and time of administration of low-molecular-weight heparin (LMHW) available in Italy
| Active principle | Brand name | Dosage and time of administration |
|---|---|---|
| Enoxaparin | Clexane® | 4,000 IU 12 h before surgery, then 4,000 IU/day |
| Nadroparin | Fraxiparine® Seleparin® | 38 IU/kg 12 h before surgery and 12 h after, 38 IU/kg every 24 h during the 3 days following surgery, thereafter increasing the dose to 57 IU/kg/day |
| Dalteparin | Fragmin® | 5,000 IU 8–12 h before surgery, then 5,000 IU/day. Alternatively 2 h, 500 IU 1–2 before surgerya and 2,500 IU 8–12 h after, thereafter either 5,000 IU/day or (only in hip surgery) 2,500 IU 4–8 h after surgery then 5,000 IU/day |
| Bemiparin | Ivor® | 3,500 IU 6 h after surgery, then 3,500 IU/day. Alternatively 3,500 IU 2 h before surgerya, then 3,500 IU/day |
| Parnaparin | Fluxum® | 0.4 ml (4,250 anti-Xa IU) 12 h before surgery, then 0.4 ml (4,250 anti-Xa IU)/day |
| Reviparin | Clivarin® | 0.4 ml (4,200 anti-Xa IU) 12 h before surgery, then 0.4 ml (4,200 anti-Xa IU)/day |
aAlthough reported by the product label, this type of prophylaxis is not recommended
Dosage and time of administration of Fondaparinux
| Active principle | Brand name | Dosage and time of administration |
|---|---|---|
| Fondaparinux | ARIXTRA® | 2.5 mg at least 6 h after surgery, then 2.5 mg/daya If creatinine clearance 20–50 ml/min 1.5 mgb |
aIn agreement with the latest edition of the American College of Chest Physicians (ACCP) guidelines [1], initiation may be postponed up to 24 h after the end of the intervention [9], although this has not been included in the label as yet
bAccording to the recent guidelines of the European Society of Anaesthesiology [10], FON is contraindicated if creatinine clearance < 30 ml/min
Dosage and time of administration of available new oral anticoagulants (NOA)
| Active principle | Brand name | Dosage and time of administration |
|---|---|---|
Dabigatrana (antifactor IIa) | Pradaxa® | 110 mg 1–4 h after surgery, then 220 mg/day If age > 75 years or creatinine clearance 30–50 ml/min or amiodarone intake, 75 mg 1–4 h after surgery, then 150 mg/day |
Rivaroxabanb (antifactor Xa) | Xarelto® | 10 mg 6–10 h after surgery, then 10 mg/day |
aDabigatran has proved not to be inferior to low-molecular-weight heparin (LMWH) both in terms of efficacy and safety. As concerns dabigatran, in the literature, there is no information available on patients undergoing regional anaesthesia [11, 12]
bRivaroxaban has shown to have greater efficacy than LMWH, with overlapping safety [13–16]. An analysis performed after publication of rivaroxaban registration study confirmed its safety in patients undergoing neuraxial anesthesia
Correlation between anesthesia and antiplatelet treatment (APT)
| Regional anesthesiaa | General anesthesia | |
|---|---|---|
| Patients on APT with | Patients on APT | |
| Acetylsalicylic acid (ASA): do not interrupt in case of secondary prevention (75–100 mg/day) | Ticlopidine—interrupt 10 days pre-op | GA always feasible |
IIb/IIIa inhibitors Abciximab—RA contraindicated Eptifibatide—interrupt 8 h pre-op Tirofiban—interrupt 4 h pre-op | Clopidogrel—interrupt 7 days pre-op | Risk of surgical bleeding must always be considered before surgery |
aAPT, if no bleeding occurs, must be resumed the day following the intervention and, in the presence of epidural catheterization, after catheter removal
| Pharmacological | LMWH, FON, NOA, VKA, UH |
| Mechanical | Active (IPC, VFP) Passive (GCS) |
| Combined | Pharmacological + mechanical |
LMWH low-molecular-weight heparin,FON fondaparinux,NOA new oral anticoagulants,UH unfractionated heparin,VKA vitamin K antagonists, VFP venous foot pump,IPC intermittent pneumatic compression,GCS graduated compression stockings